Corey Moore Reporter
Corey Moore is a news reporter at KPCC: Southern California Public Radio. Before joining KPCC, Corey worked as a producer and associate editor for "The Tavis Smiley Show" and "News and Notes" at NPR-West in Culver City.
In Washington, DC, Moore worked several years as a news anchor for Metro Networks. He also produced for BET News and the city’s government television station.
Moore earned a BA degree at Wayne State University in his hometown of Detroit, Michigan where he started his broadcast journalism career at two of the city’s top stations, WJLB-radio and WDIV-TV, the local NBC affiliate.
In his spare time, he enjoys screenwriting, his “Drenched” kickboxing class in North Hollywood, legal thriller novels and any old sidesplitting episode of "The Simpsons."
Stories by Corey Moore
Fans gear up for LA Kings going for the Stanley Cup
With mere hours to go until Game Three of the L.A. Kings' Stanley Cup bid, thousands milled around outside the Staples Center.
Death of Bishop HH Brookins draws leading clergy to LA
The Rev. Jesse Jackson and other leading clergy paid respects Thursday to Hamel Hartford Brookins, a longtime bishop and civil rights leader who died last week.
Bell replaces disgraced city manager Rizzo
Leaders in Bell have chosen someone to fill Robert Rizzo's old job as city manager. The new honcho? Former El Segundo manager Doug Willmore, recently fired for suggesting Chevron pay more in taxes.
Regulators: Expo/Blue Line junction safe despite design defect
A defect had threatened to derail trains along the curving intersection at Washington Boulevard and Flower Street, where Expo and Blue Line cars diverge.
Pro bike race pedals into downtown LA
While the L.A. Kings duke it out with the Phoenix Coyotes for a spot in the Stanley Cup finals, a big bike race will come to a close — right in front of Staples Center.
Fans to pack downtown LA for Lakers, Clippers, Kings, bike race
Tens of thousands of sports fans are crowding into downtown L.A. this weekend for a jam-packed lineup like never before. A lot of businesses are looking forward to cashing in.
LA Coliseum lease agreement reached, so now what?
Monday's vote in favor of a lease that would allow USC to manage the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum isn’t a done-deal just yet.
Leaders promise thousands of jobs from Long Beach port project
Southland leaders Monday gathered at the Port of Long Beach to mark a billion-dollar construction project that’ll combine two older facilities into one huge terminal.
LAX inspectors scrutinize thousands of Mother's Day flowers
Just one mite in an imported bouquet could throw all of California's agriculture out of whack, but it would have to go through Naveeda Mirza first.
Time to plan ahead for 'the Rampture'
Driving through West L.A. will be even harder than usual this summer, and you can blame it on what some are calling “the Rampture.”
Groups rally ahead of Obama’s Studio City fundraiser visit
Scattered demonstrations sprung up last Thursday near President Obama’s fundraiser at actor George Clooney’s home in Studio City.
In Leimert Park, mixed feelings on Obama's gay marriage endorsement
President Obama’s announcement that he approves of same-sex marriage revived memories of 2008, when many voted against gay marriage in California.
Outgoing Metrolink Chief John Fenton raised the bar, staffers say
Metrolink officials are planning to delegate the duties of outgoing chief executive John Fenton until they find someone to replace him.
Expo Line's series of early glitches raise concerns, tempers
L.A. County Metro is trying to find out what caused its newly opened Expo Line to lose power on Monday, and why it took hours to get running again.
Living wage measure for hotel workers placed on Long Beach ballot
Hospitality workers and their supporters submitted 30,000 signatures Friday to place a “living wage” measure on the Long Beach city ballot.













